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Rural regions encompass a wide variety of contexts, often facing challenges such as population decline and ageing, or limited infrastructure and services. Yet, rural territories can also be unique places for experimentation and serve as sites of transformative, sustainability-oriented development. We contribute with a theoretical perspective on rural transition pathways that connects rural pre-conditions across industrial, social, and ecological dimensions with distinct varieties of innovation – technological, community-based, and nature-based – and with system effects achieved through two key elements: change agency and rescaling. We identify four archetypes of transition pathways grounded in theoretical differences in the processes leading to system change.
Grillitsch et al. (Tue,) studied this question.